However, he insists he's no bad boy, at least not when it comes to women. Madison, who's in his 30s, indicated he's committed to his fiancée and adores their baby girl of 15 months, Ireland. "She's my little princess, my favorite action figure," he said over coffee at Starbucks.

Madison knows he's following a hard act. "We're replacing a heritage radio show." As for upset Lisle and Hahn fans, he said: "They should be. This is the show they grew up with. We'd love for them to voice their opinions."

Local show

The show will be local and broadcast from the KISS studios; the guys already have found homes here.

Content will be comical and topical, Madison said. "What the world is talking about is what we'll be talking about." Allgood and Chubs, both in their 20s, said their personal lives will be fair game as well. "We won't hold anything back," Allgood, who's married with a young daughter, said. "If there's an argument with the wife, we'll talk about it."

Expect more talk than music. "They brought us in for content," said Madison, a radio vet of 13 years who also did a stint in Dallas. "It's personality radio." However, several rock songs will play each hour.

Lots of interaction

You can call them silly, you can call them juvenile … just as long as you call them. "We want the listeners in San Antonio to take ownership of the show," Madison said.

He explained that this is what led to so much success at his station in Tulsa, making the fans "the star." The show will be different from Lisle and Hahn's in that it will be "very interactive," he added. "There will be lots of social networking (Facebook, Twitter, etc.). We love it when people call in and text."

Many of their stunts on their former station involved audience members. "One listener wanted to eat placenta on the air, sprinkle it on a doughnut," Madison said.

Another dropped off ashes belonging to a relative named Joe who died in prison. "We made coffee out of it - a cup of Joe," Derek said.

Um, yeah, OK.

Only time will tell whether The Billy Madison Show, which debuts Nov. 28, will develop a healthy audience.

I can tell you this much, however. The three guys I met were warm and polite and seemed genuinely eager to learn about our city, including the correct pronunciation of streets and other names.

They also were refreshingly self-deprecating. "We're not 'Mr. Radio Guy,' " Madison said. "We're pretty humble, down to earth … just some regular dorks."